"Internally, we talk about our strategy, and there's a three-year strategy, a five-year strategy, and a 10-year strategy," he said. "And the 3-year plan is really all about building new kinds of experiences for sharing, like so many of the questions on this call have been about. The 5-year approach is really mostly about helping people use their network to answer interesting questions or solve problems that they have. And that's where all the Graph Search work and the Open Graph work and some of the early parts of the AI work that we're doing you're going to start to see over that period of time. And then over a 10-year period, I think you'll really start to see a lot of the impact of some of the Internet.org work that we're doing, where hopefully we'll see some impact a lot sooner than that as well."

In terms of short goals, Facebook expects to see its Average Revenue Per User (ARPU) drmamatically increase within the next three years.

Facebook is also moving away from a single app to a suite of separate mobile apps that can drive a deeper experience for users.

"In terms of the focus on building new and separate experiences, our theory is that there are all these different ways that people want to share and communicate. Almost any kind of content that you can imagine sharing: text, photos, videos, links, locations, events, games — any type of content, with any type of audience. You know, whether it's privately in a one-on-one situation, or small groups, or with all of your friends, or a larger community, or publicly," Zuckerberg said.

Case in point, Facebook has revealed a Flipboard-like reader app called Paper. Paper joins Messenger as a standalone app and helps set the ground work for a standalone version of Graph Search.

Finally, the aforementioned Internet.org project is a mainstay of Facebook's 10-year plan. This ambition effort wants to bring internet connectivity to the remaining two thirds of the planet who aren't on Facebook yet.

"If we can get a lot more of the world on the Internet, I think that's going to really mean a quite different world in terms of what folks in a lot of developing countries have access to... around basic financial services, and people can get credit to start businesses and buy homes — really life-changing stuff — or get access to health information or education materials, which I think are just a really big deal", said Zuckerberg. "And over the long term, we've always wanted to help out with that, and I think that's where we're going to go on that."